The Waking Up and Headspace apps have been great for me. I’ve found that meditation is much like regular exercise, where consistency and long term adherence is more important than how much you feel you’re getting out of each individual session. Those apps have helped me build habits.
I trained pretty heavily for a couple different endurance sports through college. I definitely felt that I was overall much calmer and less anxious when I was training hard. I was just too tired to be stressed out about anything. I recently picked up boxing (mainly for the workout, not doing many fights) and felt the same effect.
I used to run pretty competitively, however I'd always train with music / an ipod. In fact I still run with my iPod classic. Even with music I still daydream almost every run.
Concentration is a muscle that has to be trained like any other. There's probably a ton of selection bias in that individuals who can't focus don't go to D1 programs.
It's not just tackle football. Other college sports, played in many countries, have significant risk of concussion. Rugby, soccer, and ice hockey look quite problematic according to [1].
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 17.5 ms ] threadWhile I advocate for sport, nothing beats meditation for increased focus!
I have tracked my stress levels over the last few years. During stretches of when I meditated, and did not.
I have absolutely noticed a difference in my internal thoughts and actions.
Before, my thoughts felt like I was in a forest surrounded by fog, visibility was impossible.
But now, I feel like the fog is slowly lifting, I am able to see the outline of the surroundings.
Give it a shot, It only takes a couple weeks of meditation to notice a difference :)
As a former collegiate athlete I’d love to agree with this.
Concentration is a muscle that has to be trained like any other. There's probably a ton of selection bias in that individuals who can't focus don't go to D1 programs.
[1] https://completeconcussions.com/2018/12/05/concussion-rates-...